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Unit 3: Theories of Income, Output and Employment: Classical Theory




             carried out without the aid of the employees of the  State Department.  The help these  Notes
             people provide, is perceived as the means by which those who supply the guiding and
             directing intelligence  at the  highest level accomplish their objectives. The intelligence,
             purpose, direction, and integration flow down from the top, and the imputation of the
             result flows up from the bottom.
             By this standard, the product of  the old Ford Motor Company and the Standard  Oil
             Company are to be attributed to Ford and  Rockefeller. (In many cases, of course,  the
             product must be attributed to a group of businessmen and capitalists, not just to a single
             outstanding figure.) In any event, labor's right  to the full value  of its produce is fully
             satisfied precisely when a Rockefeller or Ford, or their less known counterparts, are paid
             by their customers for their products. The product is theirs, not the employees'. The help
             the employees provide is fully remunerated when the producers pay them wages.

             This view of the nature of labor's right to the full produce leads to a very different view of
             the payment of incomes  to capitalists whose role in production might be judged to be
             passive, such as, perhaps, most minor stockholders and the recipients of interest,  land
             rent, and resource royalties. If the payment of such incomes did represent an exploitation
             of labor, it would not be an exploitation of the labor of wage earners. Such incomes are
             paid by businessmen-by the active capitalists; they are not a deduction from wages but
             from profits. If any exploitation were present here, it would be this group, not the wage
             earners, who were the exploited parties. What this would mean in practice is that individuals
             like Rockefeller and Ford were exploited by widows and orphans, for it is such individuals
             who make up a large part of the category of passive capitalists.
             In fact, however, the payment  of such incomes is  never an  exploitation, because their
             payment is a source of gain to those who pay them. They are paid in order to acquire assets
             whose  use is  a source of profits over and  above the  payments which  must be  made.
             Furthermore, the recipients of such incomes need not be at all passive; they may very well
             earn their incomes by  the performance of a considerable amount  of intellectual  labor.
             Anyone who  has attempted  to manage  a portfolio  of stocks and bonds or real  estate
             should know that there is no limit to the amount of time and effort which such management
             can absorb in the form of searching out and evaluating investment possibilities, and that
             the job will be better done the more such time and effort one can give it. In the absence of
             government intervention in the form of the existence of national debts, loan guarantees,
             and deposit insurance,  (not to mention "transfer  payments"), the magnitude of  truly
             unearned income in the economic system would be quite modest, for almost every other
             form of investment would require the exercise  of some significant degree of skill and
             judgment. Those not able or  willing to exercise such skill and  judgment would either
             rapidly lose their funds or would  have to be content with very low rates  of return  in
             compensation for safety of principal and, possibly, reflecting the deduction of management
             fees by trustees or other parties.
             It should also be realized that in a laissez faire economy, without personal or corporate
             income taxes (a real exploitation of labor) and without legal restrictions on such business
             activities as insider trading and the award of stock options, the businessmen and active
             capitalists are in a position to own an ever increasing share of the capitals they employ.
             With  their high incomes they can progressively buy out  the ownership shares of the
             passive capitalists.
             In this way, under capitalism, those workers-the businessmen and active capitalists-who
             do have a valid claim to the ownership of the industries in fact come to own them. Again
             and again, penniless newcomers appear on the scene and by virtue of their success secure
             a growing influence over the conduct of production and ultimately obtain the ownership
             of vast personal fortunes. An ironic consequence of Adam Smith's errors in this area, to be

                                                                                 Contd...



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